Chapter 462: Battle—6
Chapter 462: Battle—6
Leon turned toward the epicenter of the explosion.
The dust and debris still hung thick in the air, obscuring direct vision across the blast zone, but that wasn’t what he was relying on. His primary concern was practical and straightforward—that thin man had been carrying things.
The wand alone had been extraordinary, seven runes of what seemed like genuinely ancient craftsmanship. The cloak had radiated the quiet signature of a high-quality artifact. And anyone operating at that level, commanding an army of that scale, almost certainly had a spatial ring on them containing resources Leon didn’t want to simply leave buried in a crater.
Please don’t all be shredded.
He moved through the settling debris at a measured pace, picking his way through the aftermath, his spatial awareness extending outward as his direct vision failed in the obscuring dust.
He hadn’t gone halfway when he stopped.
What his spatial awareness was showing him wasn’t anything he’d anticipated finding.
The crater itself was secondary information now, irrelevant. What his perception had locked onto in front of him was something that required a full second of processing before he was certain he understood it correctly, and even then the word that arrived in his mind was simple and immediate.
Catastrophic.
The atmosphere of the realm was crumbling.
Not metaphorically. The fabric of the space itself was coming apart in the way that solid material comes apart under forces it wasn’t constructed to handle—like a cookie pressed too hard between two fingers, the structure giving way along internal fault lines that had never been stressed before and had no mechanism for recovery.
At the epicenter of the explosion, there was a hole.
Not a black hole in the technique sense Leon had used in combat. Something different and in certain ways worse—a void where the fundamental substance of this realm’s existence had been removed, and from its edges, cracks were spreading. Propagating outward through the atmosphere in branching patterns that reminded Leon of ice fracturing across a frozen surface, except what was fracturing was the realm itself.
He could feel the space element involved—the destruction the thin man’s self-detonation had done to the spatial structure of this pocket world. He could feel something deeper than that too, something that existed beneath the spatial layer, the foundational material of the realm’s existence, and it was being consumed along the edges of every crack as they spread.
The battle was too much for this world to contain.
The thin man’s self-destruction had been the final weight. An Ethereal Initiate’s full power deliberately released in a single detonation—that had clearly exceeded whatever threshold this realm could absorb without structural failure. The damage wasn’t localized. It was systemic, and it was accelerating.
The area visibly affected was only a couple of kilometers in immediate scope. Someone looking at it without Leon’s spatial awareness and understanding of space-element behavior might have concluded it was manageable. Contained.
That assessment would be wrong.
The rate of spread was increasing. Each new crack created edge surface from which further fracturing could propagate, which accelerated the overall rate, which created more edge surface. Leon understood exactly where that curve led because he understood space, and space that was actively destroying itself didn’t reach an equilibrium point.
It reached an end point.
Everything inside this realm dies when it gets there.
He let go of any thought about the treasure entirely. The wand, the cloak, the spatial ring—all of it was being shredded at the molecular level by the same process consuming the realm’s atmosphere. There was nothing to collect.
He registered the Causality notification that had arrived during the battle—twenty million points, the system counting the thin man’s self-destruction as his kill given the circumstances that had triggered it. The number landed with genuine satisfaction. He’d needed that. He felt considerably better about the Causality situation now than he had fifteen minutes ago.
But he had no time to sit with that feeling.
FWOOSH! FWOOSH! FWOOSH!
He moved back toward the battlefield through continuous teleportation, covering ground quickly, his spatial awareness already locating Archon Vyra’s position among the aftermath.
The undead had all gone down. Every single one of them—collapsed where they stood, lying across the scorched ground in the sudden stillness of things that had ceased to function simultaneously. Whatever had been sustaining them had ended with the thin man’s destruction, and the army of hundreds of thousands had become a field of inert matter in the same instant.
Leon arrived in front of Archon Vyra.
She jerked at the sudden appearance—combat instincts still active, her defensive aura flaring for a fraction of a second before recognition caught up.
Then the tension left her body.
Not gradually—like something structural had been removed all at once, her posture shifting from the sustained rigidity of someone who had been holding themselves upright through will alone. The exhale that followed was long and quiet and contained a hundred years of weight.
She looked at him.
Leon was aware of what she was seeing—the pressure his presence gave off now, the confidence that wasn’t performed, the way he stood in the aftermath of what had just happened without any visible indication that it had cost him significantly. He was aware of the expression that crossed her face, something that moved through several things quickly before settling in a place he recognized but chose not to comment on.
She looks like Ira, he noted internally, if Ira had several centuries of responsibility written into the lines around her eyes.
Archon Vyra, for her part, was experiencing something she had genuinely forgotten the texture of.
Peace. Actual peace—not the absence of immediate threat, which was all she’d been able to access for longer than she could precisely calculate, but the deeper kind. The kind that came from a problem being genuinely solved rather than temporarily survived.
She’d advocated for Ira and this young man. Had seen the strategic value, had pushed for the connection, had told herself it was about the race’s survival and the advantages his protection provided. That was true. It had been true.
But standing here now, looking at him—at what he’d become, at what he’d done today—her heart did something that the word strategic didn’t cover.
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